Argentina President Tells Dejected Team: "I'm No Soccer Fan"

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez admitted Monday she had not watched a single one of the country's matches in the World Cup soccer tournament, including the final, a blunder that some observers said exposed her as out of touch with the national mood.

A day after soccer-mad Argentina lost the World Cup final to Germany by a score of 1-0, Fernandez received the national team in the capital, giving each of the downbeat players, dressed in black suits and ties, a consolatory hug.

Fernandez had earlier declined an invitation from Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff to attend the final, saying she was recovering form a sore throat. Her counterpart, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, attended the match, even leaping with joy at Germany's winning goal.

In a televised speech, Fernandez, flanked by Lionel Messi and the rest of the team, said: "As you know I'm no soccer fan."

"I didn't see a single match, not even the one yesterday," she said, adding that she rang Argentine Coach Alejandro Sabella after the match because it felt like the team had won.

"That's how I felt and how 40 million Argentines felt, too."

Although not entirely surprising given her well-known disinterest in the sport, Fernandez's comments will do little to endear herself to a country obsessed by soccer and left heartbroken by the defeat.

Analysts said Fernandez, who cannot run in next year's election, failed to capture the national mood.

"It sort of underscores that she lives in a world of her own more and more," said Felipe Noguera, a political analyst.

"This has been a very positive month for the country and for the overall mood. And she's just not part of it," he added.

The team's run to the tournament final handed Argentina's 40 million people a rare chance to wipe from their minds the country's latest debt crisis, surging prices and political scandals.

Some fans took to social media site Twitter to vent their derision toward Fernandez.

"There is poverty, she doesn't see it. There is insecurity, she doesn't see it. Argentina's in the final, she doesn't see it," said one Twitter user.

The players had been expected to head to Buenos Aires' iconic Obelisk monument in the afternoon to greet fans who partied there until late last night, celebrating their team's performance with dancing, drummers and firecrackers.

The festivities turned sour when dozens of hooligans hurled bricks and bottles as riot police replied with tear gas and water canons.

More than a dozen police officers were injured and 120 people detained, local media said.

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez admitted Monday she had not watched a single one of the country's matches in the World Cup soccer tournament, including the final, a blunder that some observers said exposed her as out of touch with the national mood.